โJan-14-2015 04:57 AM
โJan-16-2015 05:53 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
^^^^^^^Always a good call^^^^^^^
Based on your numbers 1,900# pin is 20% of 9,500#.
โJan-16-2015 04:34 AM
โJan-15-2015 09:50 PM
โJan-15-2015 01:55 PM
โJan-14-2015 05:29 PM
It is all pretty confusing for me. Here are my numbers at the scale (full tank of diesel and my wife next to me in the passenger seat) and on the inside of the driver door sticker:
Steer axle: 4220 lbs
Drive axle: 2900 lbs
Gross weight: 7120 lbs
The sticker on the inside of the driver door says:
GVWR: 9200 lbs
GAWR Front: 4670 lbs
GAWR Rear: 6084 lbs
I am asking for the following case: we (God forbid) get into an accident and are taken to the scales. The scales put out a set of numbers and my insurance company gets these numbers. Based on these numbers they calculate that I am within carrying capacity and decide to honor insurance. Or they decide I am grossly overweight and decide not to honor it. I don't want to drive around thinking I am insured when I am not. In addition, breaking distance, safety etc. play a role. I don't want to drive around, for example, 2,000 lbs overweight and that increases my breaking distance by X feet.
โJan-14-2015 12:14 PM
mkirsch wrote:
IMHO, most people don't "decide" anything. They just blindly forge ahead with no idea that they're overloaded. Blissfully ignorant.
THAT is how they "get away with it."
You are correct, going strictly "by the book" you do not have all that much tow capacity with your current truck.
Even though you only have a "payload" of ~2000lbs, take a look at your axle weights.
The rear axle only has 2900lbs on it empty, and it has a rating of 6084lbs with stock tires. That give you 3184lbs of axle capacity. A gooseneck is generally installed directly over, or maybe 1-2" ahead of the rear axle so almost 100% of the gooseneck weight will go on the rear axle.
Looking at it this way, ignoring GVWR, opens up your towing capacity to about 15,000lbs.
You will want to register the truck's weight as the sum of the FAWR and RAWR, not the factory GVWR, if you decide to go this route. The potential for prizes (even just trophies) at the horse shows makes you "commercial" in some states.
โJan-14-2015 09:49 AM
โJan-14-2015 09:33 AM
โJan-14-2015 09:04 AM
Bedlam wrote:
If your rig was to be taken to the scales, they will look at your registered weight declaration and tire capacity. I only know of some Canadian provinces using the GVWR sticker.
โJan-14-2015 07:49 AM
โJan-14-2015 07:33 AM
rhagfo wrote:
All that said it is your choice to tow over your TV's GVWR, but many do it with 250/2500's without issue.
โJan-14-2015 07:31 AM
โJan-14-2015 07:29 AM
Bedlam wrote:
If you are trying to stay within manufacturer warranty ratings, your current truck does not have the capacity. If you are trying to stay within legal ratings, it may be possible based on the weight declared on your vehicle registration. Let us know which way you want to go with this so we can help.
โJan-14-2015 07:18 AM